3 times Queen Elizabeth survived assassination: her shooters in London and New Zealand were arrested, but the Australian plot against the British royal remains a mystery
- At Trooping the Colour in London in 1981, Marcus Sarjeant fired blanks at the queen after being inspired by the 1980 shooting of John Lennon
- No one was ever caught for trying to derail the queen and Prince Philip’s train in Australia in 1970, as they travelled from Sydney to Orange in New South Wales
There’s little doubt that Queen Elizabeth is one of the most loved figures in the UK, if not the world. She has been in the public eye all her life and has made history as the longest reigning monarch ever. In addition to this notable achievement, she is the most travelled world leader.
Here are three times people sought to assassinate the queen, and how she escaped unharmed.
Australia, 1970
For one stretch of their travels, the monarch and her husband were to go by rail from Sydney to Orange in New South Wales on April 29. Would-be assassins, McHardy told Macquarie Radio, had placed a log on the train tracks in an attempt to derail the locomotive as it neared Lithgow. Another train had scouted the tracks an hour before the queen’s train came through, finding nothing, so the log’s subsequent appearance fuelled suspicions there was an assassination plot.
The monarch’s train struck the log, but was reportedly travelling too slowly for any damage to be done. No one was ever arrested for the alleged plot – and in fact the story only came to light in 2009 when McHardy spoke out about it on his retirement. He claimed the government had successfully covered up the story up until then to avoid embarrassment.